Eastern Lacustrine Bantu

Baganda

The Baganda (sing., Muganda; often referred to simply by the root
word and adjective, Ganda) make up the largest Ugandan ethnic group,
although they represent only about 16.7 percent of the population. (The
name Uganda, the Swahili term for Buganda, was adopted by British
officials in 1894 when they established the Uganda Protectorate,
centered in Buganda.) Buganda's boundaries are marked by Lake Victoria
on the south, the Victoria Nile River on the east, and Lake Kyoga on the
north. This region was never conquered by colonial armies; rather the
powerful king (kabaka), Mutesa, agreed to protectorate status.
At the time, Mutesa claimed territory as far west as Lake Albert, and he
considered the agreement with Britain to be an alliance between equals.
Baganda armies went on to help establish colonial rule in other areas,
and Baganda agents served as tax collectors throughout the protectorate.
Trading centers in Buganda became important towns in the protectorate,
and the Baganda took advantage of the opportunities provided by European
commerce and education. At independence in 1962, Buganda had achieved
the highest standard of living and the highest literacy rate in the
country.

Authoritarian control is an important theme of Ganda culture. In
precolonial times, obedience to the king was a matter of life and death.
A second important theme of Ganda culture, however, is the emphasis on
individual achievement. An individual's future is not entirely
determined by status at birth. Instead, individuals carve out their
fortunes by hard work as well as by choosing friends, allies, and
patrons carefully.

The traditional Ganda economy relied on crop cultivation. In contrast
with many other East African economic systems, cattle played only a
minor role. Many Baganda hired laborers from the north as herders.
Bananas were the most important staple food, providing the economic base
for the region's dense population growth. This crop does not require
shifting cultivation or bush fallowing to maintain soil fertility, and
as a result, Ganda villages were quite permanent. Women did most of the
agricultural work, while men often engaged in commerce and politics (and
in precolonial times, warfare).

Ganda social organization emphasized descent through males. Four or
five generations of descendants of one man, related through male
forebears, constituted a patrilineage. A group of related lineages
constituted a clan (for lineage and clan). Clan leaders could summon a
council of lineage heads, and council decisions affected all lineages
within the clan. Many of these decisions regulated marriage, which had
always been between two different lineages, forming important social and
political alliances for the men of both lineages. Lineage and clan
leaders also helped maintain efficient land use practices, and they
inspired pride in the group through ceremonies and remembrances of
ancestors.

Ganda villages, sometimes as large as forty or fifty homes, were
generally located on hillsides, leaving hilltops and swampy lowlands
uninhabited, to be used for crops or pastures. Early Ganda villages
surrounded the home of a chief or headman, which provided a common
meeting ground for members of the village. The chief collected tribute
from his subjects, provided tribute to the kabaka, distributed
resources among his subjects, maintained order, and reinforced social
solidarity through his decision-making skills. Late nineteenth-century
Ganda villages became more dispersed as the role of the chiefs
diminished in response to political turmoil, population migration, and
occasional popular revolts.

Most lineages maintained links to a home territory (butaka)
within a larger clan territory, but lineage members did not necessarily
live on butaka land. Men from one lineage often formed the core
of a village; their wives, children, and in-laws joined the village.
People were free to leave if they became disillusioned with the local
leader to take up residence with other relatives or in-laws, and they
often did so.

The twentieth-century influence of the Baganda in Uganda has
reflected the impact of eighteenth- and nineteenth-century developments.
A series of kabakas amassed military and political power by
killing rivals to the throne, abolishing hereditary positions of
authority, and exacting higher taxes from their subjects. Ganda armies
also seized territory held by Bunyoro, the neighboring kingdom to the
west. Ganda cultural norms also prevented the establishment of a royal
clan by assigning the children of the kabaka to the clan of
their mother. At the same time, this practice allowed the kabaka
to marry into any clan in the society.

One of the most powerful appointed advisers of the kabaka
was the katikiro, who was in charge of the kingdom's
administrative and judicial systems--effectively serving as both prime
minister and chief justice. The katikiro and other powerful
ministers formed an inner circle of advisers who could summon
lower-level chiefs and other appointed advisers to confer on policy
matters. By the end of the nineteenth century, the kabaka had
replaced many clan heads with appointed officials and claimed the title
"head of all the clans."

The power of the kabaka impressed British officials, but
political leaders in neighboring Bunyoro were not receptive to British
officials who arrived with Baganda escorts. Buganda became the
centerpiece of the new protectorate, and many Baganda were able to take
advantage of opportunities provided by schools and businesses in their
area. Baganda civil servants also helped administer other ethnic groups,
and Uganda's early history was written from the perspective of the
Baganda and the colonial officials who became accustomed to dealing with
them.

The family in Buganda is often described as a microcosm of the
kingdom. The father is revered and obeyed as head of the family. His
decisions are generally unquestioned. A man's social status is
determined by those with whom he establishes patronclient relationships,
and one of the best means of securing this relationship is through one's
children. Baganda children, some as young as three years old, are sent
to live in the homes of their social superiors, both to cement ties of
loyalty among parents and to provide avenues for social mobility for
their children. Even in the 1980s, Baganda children were considered
psychologically better prepared for adulthood if they had spent several
years living away from their parents at a young age.

Baganda recognize at a very young age that their superiors, too, live
in a world of rules. Social rules require a man to share his wealth by
offering hospitality, and this rule applies more stringently to those of
higher status. Superiors are also expected to behave with impassivity,
dignity, self-discipline, and self-confidence, and adopting these
mannerisms sometimes enhances a man's opportunities for success.

Ganda culture tolerates social diversity more easily than many other
African societies. Even before the arrival of Europeans, many Ganda
villages included residents from outside Buganda. Some had arrived in
the region as slaves, but by the early twentieth century, many
non-Baganda migrant workers stayed in Buganda to farm. Marriage with
non-Baganda was fairly common, and many Baganda marriages ended in
divorce. After independence, Ugandan officials estimated that one-third
to one-half of all adults marry more than once during their lives.

Basoga

The traditional territory of the Basoga (people of Busoga; sing.,
Musoga; adj. Soga) is in southeastern Uganda, east of the Victoria Nile
River. The Basoga make up about 8 percent of the population. Before the
arrival of Europeans, the Basoga were subsistence farmers who also kept
cattle, sheep, and goats. Basoga often had gardens for domestic use
close to the homestead. There the women of the household cared for the
most common staple foods--bananas, millet, cassava, and sweet potatoes.
Men generally cared for cash crops--coffee, cotton, peanuts, and corn.

Traditional Soga society consisted of a number of small kingdoms not
united under a single paramount leader. Society was organized around a
number of principles, the most important of which was descent. Descent
was traced through male forebears, leading to the formation of the
patrilineage, which included an individual's closest relatives. This
group provided guidance and support for each individual and united
related homesteads for economic, social, and religious purposes. Lineage
membership determined marriage choices, inheritance rights, and
obligations to the ancestors. An individual usually attempted to improve
on his economic and social position, which was initially based on
lineage membership, by skillfully manipulating patron-client ties within
the authority structure of the kingdom. A man's patrons, as much as his
lineage relatives, influenced his status in society.

Unlike the kabakas of Buganda, Basoga kings are members of a
royal clan, selected by a combination of descent and approval by royal
elders. In northern Busoga, near Bunyoro, the royal clan, the Babito, is
believed to be related to the Bito aristocracy in Bunyoro. Some Basoga
in this area maintain that they are descended from people of Bunyoro.

Bagisu

The Bagisu (people of Bugisu) constitute roughly 5 percent of the
population. They occupy the well-watered western slopes of Mount Elgon,
where they grow millet, bananas, and corn for subsistence, and coffee
and cotton as cash crops. Bugisu has the highest population density in
the nation, rising to 250 per square kilometer. As a result, almost all
land in Bugisu is cultivated, and land pressure causes population
migration and social conflicts.

A large number of Bagisu were drawn into the cash economy in 1912,
with the organization of smallholder production of arabica coffee and
the extension of Uganda's administrative network into Bugisu. After
that, the Bagisu were able to exploit their fertile environment by
producing large amounts of coffee and threatening to withhold their
produce from the market when confronted with unreasonable government
demands. One of the mechanisms for organizing coffee production was the
Bugisu Cooperative Union (BCU), which became one of the most powerful
and most active agricultural cooperatives in Uganda. Bugisu's economic
strength was based in part on the fact that coffee grown on Mount Elgon
was of the highest quality in Uganda, and total output in this small
region constituted more than 10 percent of the coffee produced
nationwide.

Land pressure during the early decades of colonial rule caused the
Bagisu to move northward, impinging on the territory of the Sebei
people, who have fought against Gisu dominance for over a century. The
Bagwere and Bakedi people to the south have also claimed distinct
cultural identities and have sought political autonomy.